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$20 Canola is too Cheap

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    #21
    I would think your fine , should have no issues with that at all , unless you get pockets of sprouts from bigger areas in fields
    No one knows the threshold as of yet that I know .
    Some of the pictures I sent were quite severe.
    Most of ours not too bad so far but we are hauling in anyway for now to fill contracts with the worst we have .

    Some of the heating issues are above 10% sprouts from what I heard .
    Not much canola in bin storage yet here . Most going straight in . But most canola just starting to come off . If a good weather week a lot will be coming off .
    Last edited by furrowtickler; Sep 5, 2021, 22:10.

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      #22
      No sprouting here? Had couple inches on swaths. Maybe cool enough since.

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        #23
        Getting back to the price of canola. Currently, the printed crush margin is negative. That s based on the current price of soyoil and soymeal. Which doesn't bode well for canola prices going up.
        Technically, both soyoil and palm oil don't seem to be able to break above their previous highs.

        Does anyone have industry connections who might be able to answer this question:

        Does the price of canola oil necessarily follow soyoil, especially right now with a deficit of canola oil, and the end uses of canola oil being much more skewed to human consumption vs animal or industrial?

        Is there more to the crush margin story, or is the party over unless soyoil reverses course?

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          #24
          Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
          Getting back to the price of canola. Currently, the printed crush margin is negative. That s based on the current price of soyoil and soymeal. Which doesn't bode well for canola prices going up.
          Technically, both soyoil and palm oil don't seem to be able to break above their previous highs.

          Does anyone have industry connections who might be able to answer this question:

          Does the price of canola oil necessarily follow soyoil, especially right now with a deficit of canola oil, and the end uses of canola oil being much more skewed to human consumption vs animal or industrial?

          Is there more to the crush margin story, or is the party over unless soyoil reverses course?
          Unfortunately for the secondary manufacturers it's not so easy to flip flop their ingredients. Formulation, nutrient information, tooling and labeling all takes time and $ to switch over. Sometimes they switch over just in time to want to switch back.

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            #25
            Originally posted by biglentil View Post
            Unfortunately for the secondary manufacturers it's not so easy to flip flop their ingredients. Formulation, nutrient information, tooling and labeling all takes time and $ to switch over. Sometimes they switch over just in time to want to switch back.
            Thank you, and that is what I have been saying all along. Brands didn't spend years and fortunes marketing a product only to flip flop the first time prices go up.
            So I assume canola oil must be commanding a significant premium to soy oil at this point?
            And therefore, the posted crush margins based on soy oil are likely irrelevant.
            But I don't know anyone within the industry who would have that information.

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